Markbass Amp with Cabs question

Hi all:
I already got a Little Mark II with a Traveler 102P speaker cab (4ohm)
I want to add another Spk cab and I'm about to decide between the Standard 104HF Front-Ported Neo 4x10, the Standard 102HF Front-Ported Neo 2x10 or the Traveler 151P Rear-Ported Compact 1x15 that comes only in 8ohm I think.

What is my best match? and whitch is the right connection related to watt's and ohm's to get the max benefits.

Hi all:
I already got a Little Mark II with a Traveler 102P speaker cab (4ohm)
I want to add another Spk cab and I'm about to decide between the Standard 104HF Front-Ported Neo 4x10, the Standard 102HF Front-Ported Neo 2x10 or the Traveler 151P Rear-Ported Compact 1x15 that comes only in 8ohm I think.

What is my best match? and whitch is the right connection related to watt's and ohm's to get the max benefits.

Thanks in advance!!

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If your 210 is 4 Ohms, then you can not combine any other speaker with it and your head. Your head has a minimum rating of 4 Ohms.

Yep, as others have said all markbass heads run @ 4 and 8 ohms, they cannot handle 2 ohms.

The only way you can add another cab is if you added another 4 ohm cab and connected them in series instead of parallel, although your original cab will be slightly more quiet you would get volume out of the 2nd cab.

Oz5,
CL400Peavey is correct that you can't have another 4 ohm cabinet hooked up to your amp. To help make your decision, you'll either need 2 8 ohm cabs or 1 4 ohm cabinet to make full use of the 500 watts of your amp if the cabinet (Traveler 102P) you now own isn't enough.

Thank you very very much I really apreciated, now I'm going confident!!

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Just be careful, you have a decent amount of power at hand, but your cab isnt going to handle much. A 210 isnt going to hit its mechanical limits around 200 or so watts, way below what your head is capable of producing. Use your ears, when you cab sounds like it is farting, back off the volume or the low end or both.

Never buy a small 4 ohm cab. Better option is to get a higher-powered head (like a Little Mark 800) and 8 ohm cabs, this way if you're only using one cab, the head is putting out less wattage at 8 ohms and you won't blow up the cab. Also, 8 an ohm cab can be paired with another 8 ohm cab for a 4 ohm load, which will then take advantage of the full 4 ohm power output of the higher-powered head.

The only time you should get a 4 ohm cab is when it's a 6x10, 8x10, or a big 2x15 - something to which you could never foresee needing to add an extension cab. This is, of course, assuming you're using a "modern" head with a 4 ohm limit. Older heads, like Ampeg SVT and SWR SM-900 go down to 2 ohms, which is great for Madison Square Garden-esque applications, but basically useless for anything smaller....